"Resurrections" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
The concept of rise, revival, or revival, especially of someone or something that has died, been forgotten, or fell into disuse.
Resurgent: (adjective) <br><br>Returning or arising again, especially after a period of decline or low activity; revived or renewed.
To bring something or someone back to existence, life, or popularity after a period of decline or being forgotten. It can also refer to the act of raising someone from the dead in a religious or supernatural context.
The raising of a person or thing from death or non-existence to a new form of life or existence. <br><br>Example: The resurrection of Jesus Christ is a central event in Christianity.
A believer or practitioner of the Resurrection, particularly in Christianity, who holds that Jesus Christ was raised from the dead and offers eternal life to those who believe in him. Alternatively, a member of a medical fraternity or "anatomical Abeolotte," a person who steals corpses from graveyards to conduct experiments or dissections.
The term "resurrectionists" refers to people who, often during the 18th and 19th centuries, engaged in the illicit practice of exhuming corpses from graveyards and burial grounds, especially to sell the bodies to anatomists for use in dissection and medical education.<br><br>These individuals would often target freshly buried bodies or steal them from hospitals and mortuaries. Their primary motivation was financial, as they could sell the bodies to anatomical schools, where they were used to instruct medical students in the study of human anatomy.<br><br>The practice of corpse-selling was prevalent in many European cities, including London, where Charles Dickens exposed the scandal in his novel "Bleak House". Resurrectionists were often viewed by society with great disdain, and their activities were considered a public nuisance and a breach of social norms regarding death and decency.<br><br>While the term "resurrectionist" typically conjures up images of grave robbers, it's essential to note that not all resurrectionists were violent or voluntary robbers; some were also individuals possessing another profession, such as gravediggers or executioners, who engaged in the practice as a supplement to their income.<br><br>The term has also, on occasion, been used metaphorically to describe the "resurrection" of hidden or dead concepts, ideas, or plans that had gone into decline or obscurity.
To bring back to life or revive something, such as a group or an industry, after it has failed or declined.
Capable of being revived or recovering; that can be given life or revived in a grave or hopeless situation.
To revive or restore someone or something to life, health, or consciousness, especially after a period of unconsciousness, illness, or injury.
Brought back to life or consciousness; revived after being unconscious, often after a serious illness or injury.
brought back to consciousness or life after a period of unconsciousness, illness, or death.
Resuscitations refer to the act or process of reviving or restoring someone to consciousness or life after a period of unconsciousness or death-like state, often in response to medical intervention such as cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). It can also imply repeated attempts to revive someone who is dying or in cardiac arrest.<br><br>The word can also be used more broadly to describe a transformation or revival of interest, energy, or vitality in something or someone, such as a resuscitation of a previously lagging project or a resuscitation of a dying art form.